On August 20, interim Congress president Sonia Gandhi is set to chair a virtual meeting of leaders of Opposition parties. Expected to log in are Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee, DMK바카라™s M.K. Stalin, Shiv Sena바카라™s Uddhav Thackeray, JMM바카라™s Hemant ÂSoren바카라”all CMs바카라”as well as NCP supremo Sharad Pawar and RJD바카라™s Lalu Yadav, among others. The virtual meeting is part of efforts by various political stakeholders to unite like-minded ÂOpposition parties and iron out differences among them well before the mammoth challenge of humbling Narendra Modi바카라™s formidable BJP presents itself at the 2024 general elections.
But it바카라™s hard to paper over the cracks in Opposition unity, although the parties presented enough optics, rhetoric and physical disruption of this monsoon session of Parliament to showcase a united stand against the Modi government on issues ranging from the Pegasus spyware row to farm laws. Par for the course were regular strategy sessions among floor leaders of Opposition parties, and the voluble interruption of parliamentary proceedings that forced the session to be curtailed by two days.
For most part of the monsoon session, the Opposition functioned like one cohÂesive unit. The reticence among various party leaders to accept Congress바카라™s Rahul Gandhi as a central figure among them, too, seemed to be waning as MPs across the Opposition spectrum honoured his invite for breakfast and, on more than one occasion, let him lead their charge during joint press briefings. And then, days ahead of the sine die adjournment of both Houses, chinks began to reappear when, at a dinner hosted by rebel Congress leader Kapil Sibal to mark his 73rd birthday, his party and its first family바카라”the Gandhis바카라”came in for a verbal assault by prominent Opposition figures who were among the invitees.
At Sibal바카라™s dinner, Naresh Gujral, veteÂran MP from the BJP바카라™s former ally, the Shiromani Akali Dal, implored the Congress to free itself from the 바카라śclutches of the (Gandhi) family바카라ť, while the National Conference바카라™s Omar Abdullah practically blamed a 바카라śweakened Congress바카라ť for being the biggest hurdle to a strong Opposition. When Gujral floated the idea of a united Opposition front minus the Gandhi family, none of the Congress leaders present바카라”Ghulam Nabi Azad, Manish Tewari, Shashi Tharoor, Prithviraj Chavan (all part of the now famous G-23 brigade) and P. Chidambaram바카라”countered. Even Lalu, Sonia바카라™s staunchest and most vocal votary among non-Congress Opposition leaders, stayed quiet. Evidently, this wasn바카라™t just another birthday bash thrown by a politician. It had an aura of Machiavellian political machinations.


Rahul Gandhi at a meeting with Opposition leaders
If Sibal바카라™s aim was to rattle the Gandhis and shake them into action, he seems to have achieved this to some extent. Sonia, who has largely remained absent from Lok Sabha proceedings during the past year, turned up in Parliament the day after Sibal바카라™s dinner and began reaching out to leaders of like-minded parties shortly thereafter. The plans for a virtual meeting of chiefs and senior leaders of Opposition parties, now scheduled for August 20, was also firmed up, ostensibly as an immediate aftermath of Sibal바카라™s dinner and its guest list. Then, on August 15, Sonia briskly walked across from her 10, Janpath residence to the adjoining Congress headquarters at 24, Akbar Road to unfurl the national flag on Independence Day바카라”a tradition she had given the pass last year when party veteran A.K. Antony was nominated to do the honours.
바카라śThese are subtle but hard to miss indications that Sonia will not let detractors, whether within the Congress or among Opposition parties, gnaw at the centrality that her family and the Congress have always enjoyed in India바카라™s politics, or certainly among the admittedly diminishing non-right political space,바카라ť says an aide of the ailing interim Congress chief. Congress insiders insist that the Gandhis바카라”Sonia, Rahul and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra바카라”are now confronted with two immediate challenges and it is their response to these that will determine their electorally atrophying party바카라™s Âfuture as well as their own status within a broader Opposition front.
바카라śThe party바카라™s inability to win elections has directly dented the authority of the Gandhis as was evident in the letter by G-23 last year. Our allies in the OppoÂsition too view us as a liability becÂause of these reasons. The only way the high command can now address these is by, first, carrying out a massive organisational surgery that has been put off for far too long and, secondly, by proactively engaging with chiefs of various Opposition parties to dispel any doubts that the Congress, and the Gandhis, remÂain the fulcrum of any Opposition unity project,바카라ť says a senior Congress MP. Sibal, the Congress바카라™s key in-house critic, while welcoming Sonia바카라™s effort to bring Opposition parties together through her scheduled virtual meeting, insists that his 바카라śpush for internal Âreforms will continue바카라ť.


Former MP Sushmita Dev, who was the Congress women바카라™s wing chief, has joined TMC. Seen here with TMC바카라™s Derek O바카라™Brien.
Within the broader Opposition, the unease over the Congress high command바카라™s inability to expeditiously set its house in order has been growing along with a sense that the Congress바카라™s deepening rot may eventually snuff out any grand ambitions that the still-evolving federal front may have to elbow the BJP out of power in 2024. 바카라śThere is no doubt that a strong Congress is crucial for a united Opposition that hopes to defeat the BJP in 2024. Now, it is for the Congress leadership to decide how it can best address its internal issues,바카라ť says RJD바카라™s Manoj Jha. Senior DMK MP Tiruchi Siva says setting aside personal interests to stitch a formidable 바카라śstate-wise anti-BJP coalition is a collective resÂponsibility of every Opposition party바카라ť, but 바카라śas the only national alternative to the BJP, the responsibility is greater on the Congress and the party must apply internal correctives with a sense of urgency바카라ť.
For the Congress, and the Gandhis, dimÂinishing electoral returns have translated into a growing inability to retÂain leaders. In recent years, the BJP had been the biggest beneficiary of attrition from the party. A significant chunk of saffron lawmakers바카라”from Jyotiraditya Scindia to Rita Bahuguna Joshi바카라”as also Assam chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma are former Congress stalwarts. However, while the Gandhis dream of bringing together Opposition parties into a rainbow coalition led by the Congress, they now face the risk of losing colleagues to the very Opposition parties they wish to do business with.
The party lost its women바카라™s wing chief and former MP, Sushmita Dev, to the Trinamool Congress this week. Dev was the second high-profile departure to the Trinamool in recent months, the first being Abhijit Mukherjee, former MP and son of Pranab Mukherjee. With Mamata Banerjee and her heir, Abhishek, keen on using the euphoria over their party바카라™s Bengal victory to spread its electoral footprint beyond the state, sources say the TMC is looking to poach more leaders from other political parties and the Congress is fair game. 바카라śThe Trinamool Congress will focus on states that have a substantial Bengali-speaking population and we are preparing for an aggressive campaign in Tripura that goes to the polls next year. Sushmita Dev바카라™s family has a strong appeal in Tripura바카라™s Bengali community (her father Santosh Mohan Dev was twice elected to the Lok Sabha from Tripura West) as also in Assam바카라™s Barak Valley. If the Congress couldn바카라™t retÂain her, that isn바카라™t our problem,바카라ť a Trinamool MP tells Outlook.
Though Trinamool바카라™s Derek O바카라™Brien rejÂects the charge of his party poaching Congress leaders, saying 바카라śthis is not our party바카라™s style바카라ť, a senior Congress leader from Bengal rues that 바카라śour high command바카라™s blind affection for Mamata has prevented them from seeing how she poaches leaders of our party to weaken the Congress바카라ť. The Bengal Congress leader says: 바카라śAdhir Ranjan Chowdhury had repeatedly cautioned the high command about Banerjee바카라™s plans to wean away our leaders, but it had no impact. The TMC poached a big chunk of our MLAs who were elected in the 2016 Âassembly polls and now it is doing the same with people like Sushmita and Abhijit.바카라ť Sources say the TMC is also in touch with more Congress leaders from Bengal, Tripura and Assam.
A Congress leader close to the high command says 바카라śpoaching of our leaders by the Trinamool or any other Opposition party is an act of betrayal바카라ť, but grudgingly concedes that 바카라śwe cannot let these setbacks come in the way of our plan for an Opposition coalition because such an alliance is the only way that the Congress can stay electorally relevant바카라ť.
As if these inherent contradictions in the unity project weren바카라™t enough for Sonia to deal with, says a Congress Âveteran who is part of the G-23 brigade, she still has the 바카라śunenviable task of Âensuring that Rahul is acceptable to leaders like Sharad Pawar and Mamata Banerjee as a central pole of a united Opposition바카라ť. Sources say Sonia has told Rahul to actively court Opposition Âleaders, as was evident during the recent Parliament session. However, the G-23 leader cautions, 바카라śit is one thing to bring together the Opposition during a Parliament session and entirely another to form an electoral coalition where the demands are completely different.... Before we begin dreaming of leading a federal front, our so-called high command needs to show it can still lead the Congress.바카라ťÂ
(This appeared in the print edition as "Wait Till The Glue Dries")